Breakdown of В парке птицы поют громко каждое утро.
парк
the park
в
in
каждый
every
петь
to sing
утро
the morning
птица
the bird
громко
loudly
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Questions & Answers about В парке птицы поют громко каждое утро.
Why is В парке used here, and what case is парке in?
The preposition в with the prepositional case indicates a static location (“in the park”). The noun парк becomes парке in the prepositional case. If you wanted direction (“to the park”), you’d use в парк (accusative case).
Why is птицы in the nominative plural and not another case?
Птицы is the subject of the sentence (they perform the action поют), and subjects are in the nominative case. The singular is птица, and its nominative plural form is птицы.
Why aren’t there any articles (a, the) before птицы or парке?
Russian does not have definite or indefinite articles like English a or the. Context, word order, or adding words like этот/та/те (this) can show definiteness, but you don’t need articles.
What form is поют, and how does it fit into Russian verb conjugation?
Поют is the third-person plural present tense (imperfective aspect) of the verb петь (to sing). Conjugation in the present tense goes:
- я пою
- ты поёшь
- он/она поёт
- мы поём
- вы поёте
- они поют
Why is громко used here instead of an adjective?
Громко is an adverb meaning “loudly,” and it modifies the verb поют (how they sing). An adjective like громкие would modify a noun (e.g., “loud birds”), but to describe the manner of singing you need an adverb.
Why is каждое утро used for “every morning,” and what case is утро in?
Time expressions like каждое утро typically use the accusative case in Russian to mean “each/every [time].” Утро is a neuter noun whose accusative singular is identical to its nominative (утро). The adjective каждый agrees in gender, number, and case: neuter singular accusative → каждое утро.
Could you reorder the sentence? Is word order flexible in Russian?
Yes. Russian word order is relatively free and used for emphasis or style. You could say:
- Птицы в парке каждое утро поют громко.
- Каждое утро в парке громко поют птицы.
All mean “In the park, birds sing loudly every morning,” but the neutral order is В парке птицы поют громко каждое утро.
Where is the stress in поют and пáрке, and does it ever change?
In поют, the stress is on the second syllable: по-ют (po-YUT). In пáрке, it’s on the first syllable: пáр-ке (PAR-ke). Russian stress can shift depending on the word form, so it’s good to learn each word’s stress pattern.
What’s the difference between каждое утро and по утрам?
Both express a habitual morning action.
• Каждое утро literally “each morning.”
• По утрам uses the prepositional plural and means “in the mornings” or “every morning” with a more general habitual sense.
You can say: В парке птицы поют громко по утрам.